Mag-log inElena‘s POV
I woke before dawn and reached for the calendar on my nightstand.
Day twenty-nine.
The red marker felt heavy in my hand as I drew a line through yesterday.
Blake was still asleep beside me, his breathing deep and even. I watched him for a moment, the curve of his jaw, the way his dark hair fell across his forehead.
I slipped out of bed and padded down the hallway to the kitchen, where I made a phone call I'd been dreading.
Sarah picked up on the second ring. "Elena? It's five in the morning."
"I know, I'm sorry." I kept my voice low. "I need to ask you something."
"Anything." She said without hesitation.
That was Sarah, my oldest friend and the only one who'd stuck by me through everything. She didn't ask questions when I showed up at her door crying. She didn't judge me when I made excuses for Blake. She just loved me, quietly and completely.
"The severing ritual," I said. "The witch gave me the details. I need someone to handle the arrangements after I'm gone and make sure everything is... taken care of."
Silence on the other end.
"Elena." Her voice was careful now. "What are you talking about?"
"I can't explain everything but I need you to promise me you'll do this. And that you won't tell anyone, especially not Blake."
I could picture her sitting up in bed, rubbing her eyes, trying to make sense of what I was saying.
"You're scaring me."
"I know. I'm sorry. But please—just promise me."
She exhaled slowly. "Okay. I promise.
"Thank you, Sarah."
After I hung up, I stood at the kitchen window thinking back to when I first met him.
I met Blake at a winter solstice dance, back when I was nineteen and still believed in fairy tales.
He'd walked into the hall like he owned it, all broad shoulders and easy confidence. I was standing by the drinks table, too shy to talk to anyone, when our eyes met across the room, Ayla surged to the surface so fast it made me dizzy.
Mate, she'd whispered. He's our mate.
Blake must have felt it too, because he crossed the room in three strides and stopped right in front of me, close enough that I could smell pine and woodsmoke on his skin.
"It's you," he said, like he'd been searching for me his whole life.
We danced until midnight. He told me about his dreams of becoming Beta someday, of proving himself to the pack. I was nineteen and hadn’t shifted but he held my hand and said, "Then I'll help you. We'll do it together."
And he did.
When the full moon came, Blake stayed by my side through every agonizing moment of my transformation. He talked me through the pain, held me when my bones cracked and reformed, wiped the sweat from my face when I thought I was dying. Afterward, he carried me home and made me soup and didn't leave until he was sure I was okay.
Those first months were hard, we had nothing, just a tiny apartment with a leaky roof and barely enough money for food. But we were happy, so ridiculously, stupidly happy.
I used to fall asleep listening to his heartbeat, thinking, This is it. This is forever.
When did that change?
When did the boy who held me through my first shift become the man who couldn't even look at me anymore?
I was staring at my reflection in the bathroom mirror when the pain hit.
It started as a flutter in my chest, then sharpened into something that stole my breath. I grabbed the edge of the sink, and watched my face go gray in the glass.
Breathe, my wolf urged. Just breathe.
But I couldn't.
I looked at the woman in the mirror and gaped.
When had I become this person? This ghost wearing my skin?
I've been alone, I realized. I've been alone for so long, and I didn't even notice.
The bathroom door flew open.
Blake stood in the doorway, his hair messy from sleep, his eyes wide. "I felt—" He stopped, taking in my hunched posture, my white-knuckled grip on the sink. "What's wrong? What happened?"
The mate bond. He'd felt my pain through the bond.
So it still worked, at least a little. At least enough for him to know when I was hurting.
"Nothing," I managed. "I'm fine."
"You're not fine. You look like you're about to collapse." He stepped closer, frowning. "Why aren't you at the hospital?"
"I said I'm fine."
We stared at each other before he smiled, he moved behind me and wrapped his arms around my waist, pulling me back against his chest.
"I'm sorry," he murmured into my hair.
I closed my eyes as his warmth seeped into my back, and for one moment, just one, I let myself believe him.
This is enough, I told myself. These crumbs of affection. They're enough.
Even though I knew they weren't.
When I woke up, I was in bed and Blake was sitting beside me with a bouquet of moonflowers.
White petals glowing softly in the afternoon light. The same flowers he'd brought me every Sunday for over three years.
"You fainted," he said. "I carried you back to bed."
I pushed myself up against the pillows. "Moonflowers."
"Your favorite."
I took the bouquet, cradling it gently. "You bring me these every Sunday. How many years now? Since the day you asked me to be your mate."
Blake smiled. "You remember."
"You said moonflowers symbolize loyalty. That you'd never give me a reason to leave."
"I meant it."
I looked at him, searching for the truth in his eyes. He'd given me so much over the years. Houses. Cars. Beautiful things. He never let me want for anything material but somewhere along the way, he'd stopped giving me the thing I actually needed.
Himself.
Still, I couldn't let go. I kept drowning in these small moments of warmth, these glimpses of the man he used to be.
I unwrapped the bouquet carefully, and something tumbled out from between the stems.
A ring.
My heart stopped.
I'd seen this ring before. On Lydia's hand, three weeks ago, when I'd spotted them together at the restaurant. She'd been showing it off to the waitress, laughing about how Blake had surprised her with it.
This ring, my wolf howled. He gave this ring to her. And now he's giving it to you. How can his heart belong to two people?
"Blake." My voice came out strange. "Do you remember what you said when you first told me you loved me?"
He tilted his head. "What do you mean?"
"You said if you ever fell in love with someone else, I should leave immediately. That you'd never want me to stay with someone who couldn't give me his whole heart." I turned the ring over in my palm. "Do you remember?"
Confusion flickered across his face. "Elena, what's going on? Why are you bringing this up?"
I forced a smile. "Nothing. Just something that came to mind."
His phone buzzed. He glanced at the screen and when he stared back at me with an apologetic expression.
"I have to go," he said, standing. "Work emergency."
"On a Sunday?"
"Council business." He kissed my forehead, "I'll be back later."
He was out the door before I could respond. Through the window, I watched him jog to his car with his phone pressed to his ear. And even though I couldn't hear the voice on the other end, I knew.
I knew exactly who was calling.
Neah's povCharles's face looked worse in daylight.The bruising had spread overnight, blooming purple and yellow across his jaw and cheekbone, swelling one eye nearly shut. His lip was split in two places and his nose, which had been crooked before Martin got to it, now sat at an angle that would require a physician to correct. The scarred side of his face had escaped the worst of it, which was almost funny in a grim way. Martin had beaten the undamaged half to match the damaged one.I stood beside the bed while the physician applied salve to the worst of the cuts, and Charles sat propped against his pillows with his good hand gripping the sheets and his jaw clenched against the sting. His mother sat on his other side, her face tight with fury and worry in equal measure, her hand resting on his withered arm as if she could protect him from further harm through proximity alone.My mother handled everything.Margaret moved through the room. She poured tea for Charles's mother and aske
Beatrice's povI stumbled backward from Charles's table and hit something solid.Familiar arms caught me and a scent my wolf recognized immediately, Martin's scent. He stood behind me with his hands on my shoulders, and I could feel his wolf pressing forward against his skin, not gentle this time, not restrained, but hard and hot and ready."Beatrice," he said. "Are you alright?"Before I could answer, Charles was on his feet. He'd hauled himself upright using the table for leverage, his face red and dripping, the water I'd thrown still running down his collar. His good hand gripped the tablecloth so hard the glasses rattled."That woman is my wife!" Charles shouted. His voice cracked through the restaurant, loud enough to stop every conversation in the room. The candlelit space, which had been murmuring with quiet dinners and polite laughter, went dead silent. "She is mine, and I will not be disrespected by a slave who doesn't know her place!"Martin's hands left my shoulders.I felt
Beatrice was copying scrolls in the records room when Margaret walked in with her chin raised and her hands clasped in front of her and the absolute certainty that every person inside would give her their full attention. Beatrice looked up from her work. She didn't stand."You must be Beatrice," Margaret said warmly. "I'm Margaret. Neah's mother. I don't believe we've been properly introduced.""We haven't," Beatrice said. "Though you did try to have me thrown in the dungeon last week."Margaret's smile didn't waver. She pulled out a chair and sat across from Beatrice, smoothing her skirt over her knees, and studied the younger woman with the patient attention of someone appraising livestock."I've come to offer you something," Margaret said. "A kindness, if you'll hear me out."Beatrice set her pen down. Her wolf was alert inside her, ears forward, reading the older woman's scent and posture and finding nothing in either that resembled kindness."I've watched you suffer," Margaret c
Neah's povThe report arrived at noon, and by the time I finished reading it, three of my attendants had already backed toward the door."She's alive," I said.The words came out calm, it was the most dangerous version of me, and everyone in the room knew it. I set the report down on my vanity and smoothed the paper flat with both hands, pressing the creases out slowly, as though the act of straightening a piece of parchment could somehow straighten the fury that was building inside my chest."Not only alive," I continued, "but still under his protection, in his household and breathing the same air, walking the same corridors, sleeping under the same roof as the man who was supposed to be mine."My wolf paced behind my ribs, restless and vicious. I could feel her pressing against my skin, wanting out, wanting to tear something apart with teeth and claws instead of words. I denied her. Wolves who lost control lost everything, and I had not spent nine years at Cedrick's side by being ca
Beatrice's povHe pulled back from the kiss and looked at me, and the accusation was already forming on his face before his mouth opened."Martin," he said.One word, loaded with everything he wouldn't say. He sat across from me in the carriage with his breathing uneven and his wolf still pressing gold at the edges of his eyes, and instead of asking why I'd gone rigid, instead of asking what was wrong, he reached for the same name he always reached for. As if Martin were the answer to every question he didn't want to hear. "This isn't about Martin," I said.He said nothing, but his eyes said everything. I was tired. Tired of the accusations, tired of the jealousy, tired of being pulled between two men who both wanted to own some version of me that suited their needs. So I told him the truth."I loved you once," I said before I could stop the words. He went still."When I was seventeen, I loved you," I continued. "I thought about you every day for years after you saved my life. I bu
Beatrice's povI walked.I didn't know where I was going and it didn't matter. My ankle throbbed with each step and the night air was cold against my wine-soaked skin and the white gown clung to my body in patches of crimson that looked, under the streetlamps, like blood. The road outside the estate led downhill through a stretch of cobblestone lined with iron lampposts and old trees whose branches tangled overhead. A couple walking arm in arm glanced at me and then looked away quickly, the way people do when they see something they don't want to be involved in. A man smoking on a bench watched me pass with open curiosity. A woman pulling a child by the hand crossed to the other side of the street.I let them look. I didn't have the energy to care.Kennedy's voice still rang in my ears. Whore. Slave. Luring men. Spreading her legs. The words sat inside me like swallowed glass, cutting me each time I breathed. The worst part wasn't the insults themselves. It was the silence of the roo
Elena’s povLydia didn't wait to be invited in.She stepped past Blake like he wasn't even there, her heels clicking against our hardwood floors. "I'm here in my capacity as Chief Warrior," she announced, smoothing her dress as she surveyed our living room. "A formal visit."Blake moved to block h







